The state-run Recovery School District will hold a meeting for parents and community members Monday evening to discuss the future of L.B. Landry High School, one of a series of gatherings over the next several weeks to lay out options for the relatively small number of campuses in the district that haven't already been converted into charter schools.

Patrick Dobard, a deputy superintendent at the RSD who handles community outreach, said district officials will explain where the school stands now, what the district's academic goals are and the potential next steps.

Landry is one of 15 schools in the RSD that are still run the traditional way, with the district having a direct hand in decisions about personnel and budgets. The rest of the district's more than 60 schools are independent charters that operate with a greater level of autonomy.

Landry also has a preliminary school performance score, derived from test results, attendance and dropout data, of 46.7. The state considers any score under 65 "academically unacceptable." So the district will be asking community members and parents for their input on turning the school around, a process that could mean bringing in one of the city's proven charter operators to take over management, among other options.

The RSD will be having meetings for all of its direct-run schools with a performance score below 65 after spring's round of standardized testing, hoping to come up with a turnaround plan that's palatable to community members.

The Landry meeting will take place on the school's campus in Algiers at 6 p.m. on Monday.